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The Preeclampsia Foundation does not necessarily endorse any research or news found in this forum, we just want to share what is out there. Please use your own discretion to evaluate any information you find here.

Welcome, Mary! Like Caryn said, we have tons of information and experiences to share. I'm a natural-birth crunchy gal, but over the years on these boards and my own experiences, I've had quite a few of those "out of the cave and gasping" moments :-D. Let us know if you get overwhelmed or if we can help in any way!

The links in my .sig are a good place to start. Another useful source for management of preeclamptics with transfer guidelines is the British [url="http://www.apec.org.uk/precog.htm"]PRECOG[/url], or the Pre-Eclampsia Community Guideline.

Hello, I am Mary, a second year midwifery student seeking my FL state midwifery license (laywoman's terms I will become a homebirth midwife)We do not care for pre eclamptic mammas -rather our objective would be to identify in a timely way, any illness and get mom into medical care so- here I am to learn.
I also write as a grandmother who just saw (late August) her daughter treated for pre eclampsia- and have attended births in the hospital for mammas w/ pre eclampsia-
I will be cruising your forums and your CME pages as Im writing about preeclampsia, please feel free to direct me to anything you believe should be looked at by future midwives :)
warmly, ~mary

The mean plasma concentrations of HbF, HbA, protein carbonyl groups, membrane peroxidation capacity and alpha(1)-microglobulin were significantly increased in preeclamptic women. The levels of total plasma Hb correlated strongly with the systolic blood pressure. The plasma haptoglobin concentrations of women with preeclampsia were significantly depressed. Increased amounts of alpha(1)-microglobulin-mRNA and protein were found in placenta from preeclamptic women and the levels of plasma and placenta alpha(1)-microglobulin correlated to plasma Hb-concentrations...

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19879940

Hmmm. That might have something to do with the rarity of anemia diagnoses among preeclamptics. We've got significantly higher bloodstream levels not just of maternal hemoglobin, but fetal as well -- and also higher levels of the oxidative markers associated with hemoglobin.

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